Some questions you feel you may have already answered many times! Lol.

What is your favorite holiday? Why is it your favorite? I think I may have said all the necessary prologue to this one in an earlier blog. You can find it here: A celebrant of the holy days of retirement. Some thoughts about the fate of ritual in a world defined by scheduled work. In brief, … More Some questions you feel you may have already answered many times! Lol.

Voting might matter if the system of ‘first past the post’ did not favour a retrograde two-party system.

Blurring out the voter in the interest of stasis and parties who want only it. Today there are we are told local elections. I cannot remember when I was last asked to vote for local Councillors and today in Durham the only people up for election are for Mayoral candidates for the North East region … More Voting might matter if the system of ‘first past the post’ did not favour a retrograde two-party system.

Speaking the Unspeakable: Alphonse Daudet ‘In the Land of Pain’

Speaking the Unspeakable: Alphonse Daudet ‘In the Land of Pain’ In the Land of Pain’ was Barnes’ own chosen title for this book and is his translation of a phrase Daudet invents in the book to describe a sanatorium for the dying. Let’s face it: Julian Barnes’s edition of his own translation  of La Doulou (La Douleur) – the … More Speaking the Unspeakable: Alphonse Daudet ‘In the Land of Pain’

A note on Luca Guadagnino’s ‘Challengers’ seen yesterday.

If you like watching how bisexual threesomes might occur that goes no further than the operations of eyes and thoughts, Luca Guadagnino ‘s Challengers will seem to you to be a film worth giving up over 2 hours of your life to. A film without love and remarkably little insight into the sexuality of a threesome, … More A note on Luca Guadagnino’s ‘Challengers’ seen yesterday.

Why is ‘camping’ just not classy? Or is it? Not for my class upbringing!

Thomas Hiram Holding, supposed to be the great populariser of the activity of camping, outside his camping tent. Whether it has sufficient academic credence (by which is meant referencing to authoritative evidence) or not, the Wikipedia entry on CAMPING fits with my thoughts, memories and, possibly, biases, in understanding what camping as a term means in … More Why is ‘camping’ just not classy? Or is it? Not for my class upbringing!

Why give a list? ‘Poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world’. Arguing the case using Kathleen Jamie’s new work. ‘Cairn’ (2024).

We do not need a list if we consider poets the ‘unacknowledged legislators of the world’. This blog takes an encounter with the reading of a rather wonderful current poet, Kathleen Jamie at the Hexham literary Feastival, to try and explain what I mean, if (as is my wont) obscurely and, in another way, darkly. … More Why give a list? ‘Poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world’. Arguing the case using Kathleen Jamie’s new work. ‘Cairn’ (2024).

Infer the answer to the prompt from this blog: The blog is in sheer joy in having heard Jackie Kay read ‘May Day’, at the Hexham Literary Festival.

This blog is in sheer joy in having heard Jackie Kay read from her new collection, May Day, at the Hexham Literary Festival in The Queens Hall, Hexham, on 26th April 2024 at 8.15 p.m. Infer the answer to the prompt from this blog! However, this blog started as a preparation to see Jackie Kay … More Infer the answer to the prompt from this blog: The blog is in sheer joy in having heard Jackie Kay read ‘May Day’, at the Hexham Literary Festival.

‘HERE the frailest leaves of me, and yet my strongest lasting’:

I thought with this one, I might not want to interrogate the prompt question asked but I find I cannot do so with the question: ‘Do you have a quote you live your life by or think of often?’ In general I hate the idea of life quotes and their command on social media – … More ‘HERE the frailest leaves of me, and yet my strongest lasting’:

Neel Mukherjee’s opening story in his novel ‘Choice’ has helped me realise that, if to develop as people is to value the uncertain ethics of all decisions and choices, it must be our decision not to become a gay male couple pioneering adoptive parenthood & that this helped us grow together.

Describe a decision you made in the past that helped you learn or grow. Neel Mukherjee’s opening story in his novel ‘Choice’ has helped me realise that, if to develop as people is to value the uncertain ethics of all decisions and choices, it must be our decision not to become a gay male couple … More Neel Mukherjee’s opening story in his novel ‘Choice’ has helped me realise that, if to develop as people is to value the uncertain ethics of all decisions and choices, it must be our decision not to become a gay male couple pioneering adoptive parenthood & that this helped us grow together.

A ‘risk you took that you do not regret’ is called life. It has to be chosen by the person living that life, not be IMPOSED on them.

Dedicated to Joanne When I worked as a social worker I believed in and promoted in my own practice, and in the learners I worked with at Teesside University later as Subject Leader in Social Work, a concept called ‘positive risk-taking‘. It was a concept first popularised by Steve Morgan in an important article and … More A ‘risk you took that you do not regret’ is called life. It has to be chosen by the person living that life, not be IMPOSED on them.

What makes you nervous? This a daily prompt blog that I am basing on visiting what would once have been classed as a vampiric B-movie, ‘Abigail’.

What makes you nervous? This a daily prompt blog that I am basing on visiting what would once have been classed as a vampiric B-movie, Abigail. What does it mean to be nervous? Wikipedia defines the most usual form as another name for anxiety. We use it far too widely – no doubt of it … More What makes you nervous? This a daily prompt blog that I am basing on visiting what would once have been classed as a vampiric B-movie, ‘Abigail’.